Download Random Road: The Geneva Chase Mysteries, Book 1 AudioBook Free
It's a criminal offenses scene worth Hieronymus Bosch, so shocking therefore senseless it challenges the neighborhood laws and intrigues veteran reporter Geneva Run after, whose job may be dying alongside that of her small-town paper. The Sheffield Post headline shouts, "Cops Call Murder Arena 'Slaughterhouse'". On the scene, Genie spurs the deputy police chief to share with her silently, "Six bodies...all nude...hacked to bits." Even tough Geneva shivers. How could such a slaughter happen on Connecticut's moneyed Platinum Shoreline, to privileged couples inside a traditional 1898 Queen Anne mansion on the shoreline of Long Island Audio? Where is the protection afforded by the gated community and the security technology set up? For Geneva, fighting alcoholism and bad options, writing this history is the last chance to redeem herself. She's lost almost every other major news job she's possessed. Working at her hometown paper is the end of the lines - you will see nowhere else to look. But ink still flows heavy in her veins. Her history on Sheffield's unlikely getting rid of field is the Post's business lead, soon picked up by metro paperwork, and she retains it, revealing the turbulence beneath the secrets of the abundant and entitled and their ability to buy off embarrassments. She is also traffic monitoring community connections, viewing a hit-and-run case disappear through a big donation, interviewing dangerous suspects, browsing a swingers golf club, joining cops for a burglary bust, and going for a guided tour to spot history's underwater ghost. All this is regardless of the distractions of the wedded man she can't quite ditch and the special, shaky romance she starts with a vintage high-school sweetheart. Can she keep her taking in in order and do her job sufficiently to avoid getting fired, surface finish the story, not further screw up her life - rather than get killed? Thomas Kies' gripping first book with its corkscrew of an storyline asks, "Do things happen for a reason, or is everything arbitrary?"